Patients with Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease have severe, recurrent life-threatening infections with otherwise poorly pathogenic mycobacteria and salmonellae. The extreme susceptibility is the result of genetic defects in the interleukin-12/interferon-gamma (IL-12/IFN-gamma) pathway. The infections are difficult to treat, and therapeutic options are limited. We explored the feasibility of antisense-mediated exon skipping as therapy for Mendelian susceptibility to mycobacterial disease with cells from a complete IL-12Rbeta1(-/-) patient. Expression constructs were first studied to determine whether IL12RB1 lacking exon 2 encodes a functional protein. The IL-12Rbeta1 expression construct lacking exon 2 was expressed on T cells. On IL-12 or IL-23 stimulation, this construct phosphorylated similar amounts of STAT1, STAT3, and STAT4 and induced similar amounts of IFN-gamma compared with a normal IL-12Rbeta1 construct. Antisense oligonucleotides (AONs) directed at exon 2 resulted in transcripts lacking exon 2 in both controls' and patients' T cells. In IL-12Rbeta1(-/-) cells, skipping of exon 2 led to expression of IL-12Rbeta1 on the cell surface and responsiveness to IL-12. We showed that IL12RB1 lacking exon 2 encodes a functional IL-12Rbeta1. We demonstrated that T cells can be highly efficiently transduced with AONs and are amenable to antisense-mediated exon skipping. Furthermore, we showed that exon skipping (partly) corrects the IL-12Rbeta1 deficiency in patients' cells.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2008-12-196220 | DOI Listing |
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